Actually, I've been saying for some time that not only is Tyson the first to fill Carl Sagan's shoes, he's arguably doing an even better job. Tyson seems totally at ease in front of an audience; Sagan never did.
100%. NDT did a great job of the COSMOS reboot, and I understand he was Ann Druyan's first choice.
The only thing I disliked about the new COSMOS was the cheap, poorly animated cartoons. One of the key appeals and strengths of the original COSMOS was the mini-documentaries that told the stories of individuals and their contributions to science, e.g. Johannes Kepler and Jean-François Champollion
There are 8 planets in our solar system, and that's a very reliable number. If we merge dwarf planets into the planet category, then the number will be "large and unknown". Either way, never again will the count be the "9" we were taught in school.
Scientific understanding changes, and people have to adapt to that.
Agree with this too. I used to be in the
"Pluto is a planet" camp, but three things have convinced me that the IAU have got this right...
1. Pluto's orbit is highly eccentric (so much so that it crosses the orbit of another planet. No other planet does this.). It is also highly inclined to the orbits of the 8 planets
2. This diagram
Orbitally, Pluto has more in common with the Kuiper Belt object Eris than it has with any of the planets
3. This comparison
Pluto is not much bigger that the Kuiper Belt object Eris, and is actually less massive!! If Pluto is a planet, then Eris is also a planet, and any other Kuiper belt object the size of Eris or bigger (and there could be thousands of them) would also have to be classed as planets.